Posts Tagged ‘psychology’

Brain Your Pain. Mind Your Pain.

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

 Philip A. Gonzales

The trick, William Potter, is not minding that it hurts.
Lawrence of Arabia, David Lean, Dir. (1962)

Brain Your Pain. Mind Your Pain.

Brain Your Pain. Mind Your Pain.

I woke up this morning with a headache; about a ’4′ on the pain scale. I thought, Ooh, I have a headache. I felt afraid that it would get worse. The headache got worse. Then I stopped thinking about it, and my headache got better.

Pain does not just happen, we have to perceive it. In modern pain management clinics, it is well recognized that our usual thought patterns and emotions affect how much we feel our pain. Biochemistry can affect the perception of pain, for example, the release of adrenalin in an emergency can effectively mask the perception of pain. When the emergency is over and the adrenalin gets resorbed, then the pain returns.

This morning, my brain registered pain from sinus pressure. I brained my pain. When I put my preconception of pain into thought, words, and emotion to my pain, then my pain felt worse; I felt my pain more acutely. In that way, I minded my pain. Minding my pain did not increase the pressure that was causing the pain in my sinuses, but the pain increased. When I let go of my assumptions about the pain, that did not lower the barometric pressure that caused the differential that registed pain in my head, but I did not feel the pain any more. My mind cannot change my circumstances. Neither can my brain. In fact, my brain cannot alter the fact that pain reports are coming in from my nerves. Only my mind can choose the amount and type of attention to pay to my brain when it is receiving pain signals. My mind can modify how I perceive my circumstances.

Okay, so let’s not get all bionic about this. I’m not trying to say that creating your ideal world involves ignoring your pain. Quite the contrary; let’s always start by paying attention to pain. When you brain pain, your first step should be to mind your pain. But how you mind it makes all the difference. Let’s look at how your mind and your brain work together for your survival.

The purpose of pain is to signal your body that something is wrong. Of course, the range of problems that can cause pain is pretty broad. Is it a mosquito bite, or have you just been hit by a bullet? It’s a survival skill to be very quick about sorting out the genuine dangers from the minor invonceniences. Mosquito? Firearm? Sure, it seems simple, but the process is a complex blend of raw nerve signals and biochemistry, in negotiations with your thoughts and emotions. A mosquito bite can infect you with a crippling disease. But most of them don’t. And what about people who get shot without knowing it? Some report later that it felt like a bee sting.

If your central nervous system is relatively healthy, then you brain the pain; it registers in your brain. Your nerves have no judgement about pain; they’re just reporters, faithfully sending the story to your brain. It might be an urgent story – a high-intensity nerves impulse – or a low-level signal for minor pain. Your brain can usually identify the origin of the pain in your body. After that, your pain story gets more complicated at the hands of the editor: your expectations and emotions. The way you experience pain takes shape after your brain has received pain signals.

Mind your pain in a healthy way. Start by paying attention to it. Your attention may be captured easily to identify the source of the pain, judge the intensity of the pain, and try to place the pain in the context of the moment. Ow! A mosquito. Oh, yeah, It’s summer, and I’m in the forest. Quick and easy. But in other circumstances, interpreting your pain may not be so simple. Ow! What was that? It felt like a mosquito, but this is my basement, and it’s winter. Once you create an explanation, then you have a choice to ignore the pain or to take action. Your choice could save you the trouble of worrying about nothing, or it could save your life.

In a life-threatening situation, you will mind your pain very differently. Your attention must assay a torrent of information, some of it insignificant, some crucial to your suvival, and some facts that might contradict others. In the immediate aftermath of the catastrophic earthquake in Haiti, a man found himself trapped in total darkness in the ruins of a building. He was injured, but not pinned down. Using his pain as a springboard for rigorous, analytical thought, he remembered that he had a digital camera. Acting contrary to most assumptions about such a dire situation, he started taking pictures in that pitch-black room. He methodically made a sequence of shots 360° around himself. As each picture showed up on the camera’s display, he was able to identify a way out and crawl to safety. He minded his pain in a way that incited unorthodox thoughts and actions that saved his life.

I disagree with Lawrence of Arabia. The trick is minding that it hurts. Keep your brain and nervous system healthy so you can brain your pain. Keep your mind and emotions healthy so you can mind your pain in the ways that make it work for you. No, Lawrence; the real trick is minding your pain in a healthy way: neither exaggerating minor pain, nor failing to act for survival when the pain signals are urgent.

Reasons Happen for a Thing

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

Philip A. Gonzales 

Reasons Happen for a Thing

Reasons Happen for a Thing

For years, I tried to believe that things happen for a reason. I performed some uncomfortable mental contortions in an attempt to fit that idea into my cranium. Didn’t work; I still don’t get it. The term “for a reason” means that there is an answer to the question “Why?” So to complete the statement “Things happen for a reason… ” I had to say “… but nobody will ever know the reason.” For what reason does genocide happen? For what reason did that plane crash? For what reason will an avalanche fill her belly with that little mountain village? I give up. Turns out that our cognition is miraculous in taking us through the pleasures and perils of life. 

Things happen. We sense the things that are happening. That’s cognition. But then comes our metacognition. It’s all over the map. Yes, things do happen. Life is not messy; chocolate is messy. Life is perilous. And we want to know why. When the largest Tsunami in human history hit Alaska, there were three boats in its path. One sank. The other two rode the crest of that 1,700-foot wave and the occupants survived. Our inner beings want to ride the crest of the bad stuff that happens, so we ask “why”. Just the act of searching for a reason gives us a feeling of rising above the struggles; it drives us toward refinement of our mental suvival skills. It’s very useful. There is hardly ever a clear answer, but we try to make survival more of a certainty by looking for reasons. 

Reasons happen for a thing. Reasons and things happen almost simultaneously, but your brain begins to create the reasons within a very small fraction of a second after an occurrence that requires your attention. If you are using your senses to recognize the true nature of the world around you, then attention happens. Attention requires the use of three parts of your brain: the sensory, the emotional, and the action centers. It’s called the Triangular Circuit of Attention. Right alongside all this raw perception and attention, your left hemisphere chimes in as the “spin doctor”, in the words of psychologist Steven Pinker of Harvard University. That’s when the reasons happen, and they play a leading role in your survival. The more dangerous, confusing, or bizarre the occurrence, the faster your brain will kick into action searching for an explanation. New York University’s Joseph LeDoux (LeDoux Lab) has performed research that reveals the brain functions that arise as we cause reasons to happen for a thing. Author Laurence Gonzales (Deep Survival, Everyday Survival), writing in National Geographic Adventure, surveys the work of Pinker and LeDoux. Um, yes… he is my brother. 

I remain open-minded. An explanation of how things can happen for a reason would hold my interest. I believe in God. But I think that the power of God is revealed in the patterns of our universe that, by their very precision, strike us as being largely random. In light of all the science that illustrates how reasons happen, I’m feeling pretty good about this little survival mechanism that’s been given to us. We live in a world of change, but we try to establish comfortable patterns. It’s in our nature to try to make the rough places plain. Peace is not inherent in nature, but we strive to create peace in our minds. Still, there is a looming question: Can I create peace in a healthy mind that recognizes all of the realities that my senses report? 

As your “spin doctor” comes up with reasons, allow it to lead you toward a deeper understanding of your own responses to what happens, without judgement. Steven Pinker also calls the left side of the brain a “baloney generator”. Well, it’s up to you to determine whether your left hemisphere is going to generate baloney, or to provide you with an incisive frame of thought as you happen to your own life.

Your Comfort Zone in Ordinary and Extraordinary Times

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Philip A. Gonzales

Comfort Zone

Comfort Zone

Comfort is very important, and seeking comfort is a healthy impulse. In fact, the feeling of being safe and secure is the second most crucial layer in the Pyramid of Needs – a diagram of what we need to survive and thrive – that was devised by the famous psychologist, Abraham Maslow.

The idea of a “comfort zone” is familiar to most of us. But if there is a great change in your life – a medical crisis, a blow to your finances, the collapse of a personal relationship – your comfort zone can get in the way of your ability to survive, grow, and thrive. So it is important to increase your understanding of your own personal comfort zone.
What are the routines and familiar feelings that nurture and affirm you during ordinary times?
How do you respond when you are forced to leave your comfort zone?

In times of great change, we all have the instinct to grasp for something familiar; something that could provide comfort and security. There have been many times when a crisis in my son’s medical condition has placed me at the Emergency Department instead of in a movie theater, or in a hospital instead of on the ski slopes. Of course I would rather have been in my comfort zone than wrestling with stressful situations in which the quality of my actions was critical to the medical outcome.

Over the years, the constant demands of caring for my son, along with repeated medical crises, have narrowed down my comfort zone almost out of existence. But what has risen up in its place is a sense of vitality and depth of awareness that was hard for me to imagine in my previous existence. Escaping your comfort zone does not mean that you will have constant discomfort. Don’t be afraid. Here’s how to start controlling your comfort zone, making the most of it, but keeping it from controlling you.

Start by noticing how you feel when something unexpectedly takes you out of your comfort zone. Are you likely to be irritated? Curious? Angry? Depressed? Well, the first step to taking control is to set up your own interruptions. Create ways that you can leave your comfort zone and accomplish something that makes you active, not passive. But be sure to leave your comfort zone for new and interesting activities. It can be something as simple as setting a kitchen timer that tells you to get up from the TV and write a letter to a friend. Or it can be an entirely new adventure, like turning your vacation into a hiking tour of the Scottish coast.

No matter how you decide to leave your comfort zone, it will be a decision that will strengthen you for the more difficult times. You will become more aware; more alive by taking charge of your own comfort zone.